equitable instructional strategies for improving cte ... · class norms shape their “presentation...
TRANSCRIPT
1
EQUITABLE INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES FOR IMPROVING
CTE SPECIAL POPULATION OUTCOMES
National Alliance for Partnerships in Equity
Professional Development Institute April 23, 2015
Charlotte Gray, Educational Specialist
New Jersey Department of Education
Equitable Instructional Strategies
The urgency of the matter…
2
Equitable Instructional Strategies
Improving outcomes for all students, particularly special populations, is at the top of the American educational agenda. Many factors are attributable to this sense of urgency. • Graduation Rates
• Disproportionality
• Achievement Gap
• Global Competition
3
PLACEMENT IN CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS
(Students with Disabilities)
5
4.13
1.88
0
1
2
3
4
5
Black Hispanic
Likelihood to be placed incorrectional institutioncompared to WhiteStudents with disabilities
USDOE, 2013
6
Equitable Instructional Strategies
In New Jersey…
7
Equitable Instructional Strategies
The central goal of the New Jersey Department of Education is to ensure that all children, regardless of life circumstances,
graduate from high school ready for college and career.
8
Equitable Instructional Strategies
NJ is an overall high-performing state, yet…
9
NJ Achievement Gap Graduation rates by cohort, year and subgroup
2011, 4-year 2012, 4-year 2013, 4-year
Statewide 83.3% 86.5% 87.5%
Limited English Proficient 67.5% 73.1% 70.5%
Special Education 73.2% 74.5% 75.9%
Economically Disadvantaged 71.0% 75.3% 77.1%
Non-Econ Disadvantaged 87.4% 90.6% 91.8%
African American 68.9% 74.6% 76.4%
Asian 92.7% 95.3% 95.9%
Hispanic 73.2% 76.7% 78.6%
White 90.3% 92.6% 93.1%
Equitable Instructional Strategies
A few strategies for improving CTE student outcomes
12
Equitable Instructional Strategies
KNOW HOW YOUR STUDENTS PERCEIVE YOU “All teachers must be willing to interrogate the ways in which middle-class norms shape their “presentation of self” in the classroom since such values impact the teaching-learning process.”
Kathy-Anne Jordan, Discourses of Difference, The Journal of African American History; Winter 2005
Activity: Dr. Phil’s Personality Test
13
Equitable Instructional Strategies
MAKE YOUR CLASSROOM CULTURALLY RESPONSIVE
“When teachers and students come from different cultural backgrounds, planned efforts to cross social borders and develop caring, respectful relationships are essential.”
• Conduct cultural self-assessments. • Become a guardian of equity and access. • Value the diversity of your students. • Adjust practices and attitudes to meet the changing demographics of your classroom.
Weinstein, Curran, Clarke (2003), Culturally Responsive Classroom Management: Awareness Into Action, Ohio State University.
Activities: 1. Complete a multicultural checklist.
2. With a partner, match Chinese & American idioms.
14
Equitable Instructional Strategies
KNOW THE LEARNING STYLES OF YOUR STUDENTS (AND YOURSELF)
All students should be presented with instructional choices that are conducive to their learning styles. This is particularly important for struggling and gifted learners because instruction aligned with their learning styles allows them to develop required skills and showcase talents simultaneously. One way to determine learning styles is by administering a multiple intelligences test. Activity: Complete a multiple intelligences test.
15
Equitable Instructional Strategies
MEET & GREET YOUR STUDENTS AT THE DOOR
AND HAVE A 5-10 min. “DO NOW” POSTED WHEN STUDENTS ENTER.
Do Now (5 - 10 minutes) Students complete a journal topic, problem of the day, anticipatory set, etc. upon entering the room. The “do now” is always directly related to the lesson, requires no instruction from the teacher, and meets the academic level of every student in the class. The purpose of this routine is to immediately engage all students, activate prior knowledge, whet appetites, and bait the hook in preparation for the lesson. See research article entitled How to Start Class Every Day In your folder.
16
Equitable Instructional Strategies
Tiered Do Now Example
UNITED NATIONS
Please choose one of the following activities and begin work immediately. • Vocabulary - in your journal write down things that come to mind when you
see/hear the word “united.”
• Quotation - in your journal provide your own interpretation for the quotation, “united we stand, divided we fall.”
• K-W-L - using the KWL worksheet explain what you know and would like to know about the United Nations. Leave the “L” column blank for now.
17
Equitable Instructional Strategies
Do Now Activity Work with a partner to complete the following “do now.” Place three plus (+) signs and one minus (-) sign between the numbers so that the answer is 100. Do not change the order of the numbers.
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 What might be a directly related lesson?
18
Equitable Instructional Strategies
ADDITIONAL STRATEGIES THAT INCREASE STUDENT ENGAGEMENT AND IMPROVE STUDENT OUTCOMES
• Infuse Career Ready Practices into lessons (copy in your folder). • Add humor to your presentation, where appropriate, i.e., sing, laugh, wear
costumes, etc. • Include some of your own funny childhood experiences in your lectures. • Use videos, DVDs, computer technology, etc. to engage students. • Include popular game show strategies in your lessons, i.e., Jeopardy, To Tell the
Truth, Family Feud, etc. • Integrate popular culture into your lessons. • Make use of community resources as guest speakers, testimonials, career
discussions, etc. • Encourage in-class team activities, i.e., debates, speed games, role plays, etc.
19
Equitable Instructional Strategies
DEBRIEFING/Q&A
This completes our session for today. Let’s take a few minutes to discuss strategies from this presentation that may be implemented in your
school/classroom immediately or in the future.
Questions can also be addressed at this time.
20
Equitable Instructional Strategies
Thank you for your participation, please complete the evaluation that is in your folder.
21